Brooks Matthew M, Mueller J Tom, Thiede Brian C
Department of Agricultural Economics, Sociology, and Education, The Pennsylvania State University.
Department of Sociology, Social Work, and Anthropology, Utah State University.
Socius. 2021 Jan-Dec;7. doi: 10.1177/23780231211022094. Epub 2021 Jun 8.
COVID-19 has had dramatic impacts on economic outcomes across the United States, yet most research on the pandemic's labor-market impacts has had a national or urban focus. We overcome this limitation using data from the U.S. Current Population Survey's COVID-19 supplement to study pandemic-related labor-force outcomes in rural and urban areas from May 2020 through February 2021. We find the pandemic has generally had more severe labor-force impacts on urban adults than their rural counterparts. Urban adults were more often unable to work, go unpaid for missed hours, and be unable to look for work due to COVID-19. However, rural workers were less likely to work remotely than urban workers. These differences persist even when adjusting for adults' socioeconomic characteristics and state-level factors. Our results suggest rural-urban differences in the nature of work during the pandemic cannot be explained by well-known demographic and political differences between rural and urban America.
新冠疫情对美国各地的经济状况产生了巨大影响,然而,大多数关于该疫情对劳动力市场影响的研究都集中在全国或城市层面。我们利用美国当前人口调查的新冠疫情补充数据,克服了这一局限性,以研究2020年5月至2021年2月期间农村和城市地区与疫情相关的劳动力市场结果。我们发现,疫情对城市成年人劳动力的影响总体上比对农村成年人更为严重。城市成年人更常因新冠疫情而无法工作、因缺勤而无薪、以及无法寻找工作。然而,农村工人远程工作的可能性低于城市工人。即使在调整了成年人的社会经济特征和州层面因素之后,这些差异仍然存在。我们的结果表明,疫情期间城乡工作性质的差异无法用美国农村和城市之间众所周知的人口和政治差异来解释。